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Ever get the impression that some of our European allies are rooting for the wrong side? The same Europoliticians who've been
urging we lift United Nations sanctions on Iraq are now loudly beating the drums against Washington's plans to finally topple Iraqi
dictator Saddam Hussein.

One of our supposedly biggest buddies, Germany's Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder, recently launched his reelection campaign with
a nasty slam at President Bush and a public declaration that his government would provide neither troops nor money for an
American-led invasion.

European Union officials in Brussels whine that the U.S. should help resolve the Israeli-Palestinian conflict before moving on
Baghdad. French President Jacques Chirac has been openly shaking his head in disapproval of Bush's Iraqi strategy for months.
With the exception of Britain's Tony Blair, there isn't a single European leader who has voiced approval of ridding the world of its
most dangerous man.

Some Europeans believe that because support is all but nil for the idea, the anti-Saddam offensive will probably never take place.
Besides, argues the Norwegian paper Bergens Tidende, an attack would open a war on several Mideast fronts, and that "would
pose a greater security problem to Europe" than Iraq.

Like the French, Germans, Spaniards and most of the rest of the pack, the Norwegians would settle for the reentry into Iraq of UN
arms inspectors. Now there's a chump's solution if there ever was one.

European intellectuals go even further in their attacks on Washington's plans to oust Saddam. They see it as simply another
example of arrogant American moral and mercantile hegemony. Some of these same cerebral hacks actually were trying to
peddle the idea that we provoked Saddam into invading Kuwait in 1990 so we could send troops to the Persian Gulf to control the
oil there.

They've also argued that the CIA is behind the growth of radical Islam as a diabolical American way of keeping the world in turmoil
and under Washington's control. After all, argue these wackos, Islamism conforms with the needs of capitalism.

The real danger is that these are not the ideas of marginal eccentrics, nor are they new. As Rand Corp. policy analyst Laurent
Murawiec points out, the idea of a diabolical U.S. plot often comes from the very core of European intellectual and political
leadership. The late French President François Mitterrand was once reliably quoted as saying in private conversation, "We are at
war with America."

Of course, Europe's perverse fear and loathing of America is coupled with obsessive love for our products and our cultural and
scientific achievements. It springs in large measure from Europe's sense of diminished importance, not to mention outright
jealousy. But it is there, and its primary lesson is that ultimately we can rely only on a few real friends like Blair - but mostly on
ourselves.